Structure of the amino-terminal domain of Cbl complexed to its binding site on ZAP-70 kinase
- 1 March 1999
- journal article
- letter
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 398 (6722) , 84-90
- https://doi.org/10.1038/18050
Abstract
Cbl is an adaptor protein that functions as a negative regulator of many signalling pathways that start from receptors at the cell surface1,2,3,4. The evolutionarily conserved amino-terminal region of Cbl (Cbl-N) binds to phosphorylated tyrosine residues and has cell-transforming activity. Point mutations in Cbl that disrupt its recognition of phosphotyrosine also interfere with its negative regulatory function and, in the case of v-cbl, with its oncogenic potential5. In T cells, Cbl-N binds to the tyrosine-phosphorylated inhibitory site of the protein tyrosine kinase ZAP-706. Here we describe the crystal structure of Cbl-N, both alone and in complex with a phosphopeptide that represents its binding site in ZAP-70. The structures show that Cbl-N is composed of three interacting domains: a four-helix bundle (4H), an EF-hand7 calcium-binding domain, and a divergent SH2 domain8 that was not recognizable from the amino-acid sequence of the protein. The calcium-bound EF hand wedges between the 4H and SH2 domains and roughly determines their relative orientation. In the ligand-occupied structure, the 4H domain packs against the SH2 domain and completes its phosphotyrosine-recognition pocket. Disruption of this binding to ZAP-70 as a result of structure-based mutations in the 4H, EF-hand and SH2 domains confirms that the three domains together form an integrated phosphoprotein-recognition module.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- c‐Cbl: A regulator of T cell receptor‐mediated signallingImmunology & Cell Biology, 1998
- CblCellular Signalling, 1998
- The Cbl Phosphotyrosine-binding Domain Selects a D(N/D)XpY Motif and Binds to the Tyr292Negative Regulatory Phosphorylation Site of ZAP-70Published by Elsevier ,1997
- MODULAR PEPTIDE RECOGNITION DOMAINS IN EUKARYOTIC SIGNALINGAnnual Review of Biophysics, 1997
- EGF receptor binding and transformation by v-cbl is ablated by the introduction of a loss-of-function mutation from the Caenorhabditis elegans sli-1 geneOncogene, 1997
- The Cbl Protooncogene Product: From an Enigmatic Oncogene to Center Stage of Signal TransductionCritical Reviews™ in Oncogenesis, 1997
- Complex Complexes: Signaling at the TCRImmunity, 1996
- Does this have a familiar RING?Trends in Biochemical Sciences, 1996
- Calcium binding and conformational response in EF-hand proteinsTrends in Biochemical Sciences, 1996
- Tyrosine Phosphorylation of the c-cbl Proto-oncogene Protein Product and Association with Epidermal Growth Factor (EGF) Receptor upon EGF StimulationJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1995